Also in 1559, Uesugi Norimasa again urged Kenshin to campaign against the Hojo, a call for action that was seconded by [[Satomi Yoshitaka]]. Kenshin was able to oblige the following year with the capture of [[Numata castle]] in Kozuke. In [[1561]] Kenshin pushed further into the Hojo domain with the capture of Musashi-Matsuyama. He followed this up with a push on [[Odawara castle]] itself in [[Sagami province]]. Kenshin was able to break through the Hojo's defenses and burn Odawara Town but was unable to make any impression on the castle. For want of supplies he had to break camp within a few days and return to the north. But in the course of this campaign he had taken Kamakura and marked the occasion by a visit to the Tsurugaoka Hachiman Shrine, where he announced the adoption of both the name 'Uesugi' and the title of Kanto Kanrei. | Also in 1559, Uesugi Norimasa again urged Kenshin to campaign against the Hojo, a call for action that was seconded by [[Satomi Yoshitaka]]. Kenshin was able to oblige the following year with the capture of [[Numata castle]] in Kozuke. In [[1561]] Kenshin pushed further into the Hojo domain with the capture of Musashi-Matsuyama. He followed this up with a push on [[Odawara castle]] itself in [[Sagami province]]. Kenshin was able to break through the Hojo's defenses and burn Odawara Town but was unable to make any impression on the castle. For want of supplies he had to break camp within a few days and return to the north. But in the course of this campaign he had taken Kamakura and marked the occasion by a visit to the Tsurugaoka Hachiman Shrine, where he announced the adoption of both the name 'Uesugi' and the title of Kanto Kanrei. |